Catching winter crappie in Lakes Oconee and Sinclair

Published 12:26 pm Friday, December 18, 2015

Winter doesn’t begin until December 22 and the weather lately doesn’t feel like winter will arrive anytime soon. This past week we saw temperatures in the middle to high seventies. The colder nighttime temperatures that have already occurred have actually set in motion those changes that move us from fall crappie angling to winter angling.

Whether we will see more cold temperatures arrive is anyone’s guess but likely that will occur soon. We could however be in for another mild winter and that could impact fishing results in a negative way.

The water temperature has now dropped into the upper 50s to low 60s and the lake will not warm much if any above the present temperatures until spring arrives. More likely the water temperature will continue receding into the mid to upper 40’s over the course of the winter. Great winter fishing in my opinion depends on that happening.

The best winter angling will normally consist of fishing in front of the winter high-pressure fronts that normally drive air temperatures low and barometer readings high. That combination generally adversely impacts the fishing by shutting down the bite. The better time to fish in winter is ahead of weather fronts or after a period of relatively warm stable weather.

Having said all that, the question becomes where do anglers find wintertime crappie and what lures are best to use? The crappie have not yet begun their move back to deeper water where they will spend the winter.

During winter, the crappie becomes for the most part a creature of deeper water with only occasional forays to shallower water on warm days. Crappie will move deeper and deeper as winter progresses and as the water temperature drops.

The crappie will usually be located close to some type of underwater structure and/or cover. That might be rocks, bridge pilings, rip-rap, underwater trees, man-made brushpiles, creek channels, ledges or deepwater stumps. At times, they will be really tight to the structure/cover and hugging the bottom and at other times they will be found suspended off the bottom several feet.

The standard crappie jig is a good wintertime lure for crappie, just as it is during the spring. Trolling is a favorite technique for wintertime anglers but winter crappie can be caught using other techniques including shooting docks with jigs, jigging using crappie jigs and small spoons and by using the drop-shot rig..

Anglers who shoot docks can at times catch good winter crappie around deeper docks that contain brushpiles. Crappie will move to those areas after a few warm and stable days but will not take up permanent residence. However very large crappie will make a move to the docks much sooner than what is considered to be the spring crappie spawn.

Bottom fishing with crappie jigs and small spoons will also take a good number of winter crappie. A small crappie jig on a small jig head can be deadly when you find a good school of bottom dwelling crappie. Small silver and gold spoons are also effective. I often catch large crappie when fishing for largemouth bass with a larger jigging spoon.

The drop-shot rig has become an excellent technique for catching winter crappie. The rig allows you to fish a standard crappie jig or minnow at any depth the crappie may be holding by varying the distance between the sinker and crappie jig. The drop-shot rig can be fished by not moving the jig at all or by occasionally shaking the jig. This is an extremely deadly technique when you find a school of crappie bunched up on or near the bottom.

The number one adjustment that most anglers fail to make in winter is the speed of their lure presentation. All fish are affected by cold water that slows their metabolism. Regardless of what lure you use during the winter season, you most S-L-O-W down the speed with which you move the lure. The crappie will bite but they will not chase a lure aggressively.

Right now due to the warm weather, the crappie can still be found in the mouths of coves, in the coves and in the creeks. They are still in relatively shallow water and trolling jigs and minnows is the technique of choice. For winter crappie fishing to get really good we need colder temperatures. If that finally does occur you will need to bundle up, use some of the techniques I have mentioned and fish with patience. Good fishing and see you next week.